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Previous Employer Lied to Background Check Company
Hi, email your previous employer’s HR department, provide copies of your notice. Call the Hr department and former boss and ask them to clear this issue. Email to your new job’s HR department with the explanation.
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Student - HIPAA
Nothing will happen. Don’t worry. If there was a concern, a manager probably would have talked to you by now. If this comes up in the future, you can give them your explanation. Just don’t do it again. You can only access your patients.
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New Grad Looking for Job with No Connections
Hello, how’s your job search going so far? here’s my advice - go on indeed.com or linked, there are plenty of new grad options, but probably not in California. You need to be ready to relocate to land a great job on your resume - 1-2 years will be enough to open many doors for you in California. If you don’t hear from the recruiters back within a week, submit more resumes to other recruters. Don’t submit directly to hospitals, you’ll be waiting forever. Good luck!
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RN Jobs That Do Not Require Covid Vaccine
Sorry about all the nasty replies. I wouldn’t want any of them to be my nurse, how about that? There are plenty of places that don’t mandate vaccines. From what I know, stay away from the West Coast and Colorado. Texas and Montana made it ILLEGAL to require the shot, 10 other states made it non-mandatory as well. You just need to look and don’t be afraid to ask your recruiter.
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Which job should I take?
Which one did you take? Do you like it or regret it?
- Are there any travel nurse jobs for Unvaccinated Nurses?
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URGENT! Please help with job choice
I’m facing a major decision, got two job offers, both very far from home. I need to make a decision this week. Please help me decide - How will each of these jobs look on my resume, will I be more likely to be hired in the future with choice 1 or 2? My background - years of non-acute experience, want to get into hospital nursing, expand my skills as much as possible to land the best hospital jobs in the future, including travel. Those of you familiar with these options, can you please clarify pros and cons, or just tell me about your own experince? Job 1- A major teaching university hospital, a general medicine floor. My concern - is this job a little limiting in terms of nursing skills? It’s med-surg, but without surg - does this make sense? Will I be limited in the future to just general medicine floors? (Other factors - nice area, but expensive) Job 2- A rural regional hospital, 25 beds, will teach med surg, ICU, ER, L&D. I’m concerned about possible low census. How will this position look on a resume? Do they put your job title as a float RN, or just RN? I’m excited about the possibility of learning everything, but I’m worried - does it happen realistically, or will I end up with knowing a little bit of everything, but not enough to be proficient in each area? (Other factors - this is in the middle of nowhere, no fun to be had outside of work). Thank you in advance for your time, honesty and kindness.
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I was fired today
Hi there, Im sorry to hear about your experience and I hope you find another job soon. All home health agencies are very similar to each other, and there is usually quite a few of them around, depending on where you live.... From my own experience -- my collegue, a good nurse was fired in front of me. I couldn't believe it, as I thought this person was very competent. I asked pretty much everyone, including the medical director and the main supervisor, and spoke at length with this fired nurse, trying to figure out what happened. 1. Somehow this nurse was perceived as someone making a lot of mistakes - "too many mistakes", definitely more than one or two, including the ones which were very costly money-wise and liability-wise to the company. This was technically true -- however since she was still in training I thought it was unfair to judge her as incompetent. The supervisors had been talking about this person and her mistakes for a few weeks prior to firing he, after one particulat mistake that they felt was "the last straw". So if your situation is similar, I would say, there is probably more to the story, including possibly many more complaints against you that you don't know about. 2. This nurse was reporting to / closely working with a particular ***** who just happened to dislike her for a personal reason I can't mention here. In addition this particular ***** was a favorite of one of the higher-ups in the company so if she said she wants this person out, they sort of listened. The combination of these two dynamics eventually got this nurse fired. She got a better job pretty soon after that, by the way... I would look at it this way -- if they treated you unfairly, then this place is not your dream job anyway.
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Hawaii RN jobs? Anyone from Hawaii?
A question to the OP -- how do you guys apply? Do you e-mail your resume? Do you walk in? The problem might be in the way you apply...
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Moral/Ethical Advice
Wow...Why is this bothering you so much that you can't sleep? There is only one answer to your question -- regardless of what your school's "code" says -- it would be ethically WRONG to report your classmate.
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CRNA to anesthesiologist
I can only answer your first question -- no, there is no program in the US that allows you to go straight to CRNA master's without nursing experience.
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ACID-BASE BALANCE
pH of 7.31, paCO2 of 39, PO2 of 92 and HCO3 of 18 pH is low -- acidocis PCO2 is normal (35-45 mm normal) PO2 is normal (80-100 mm normal) HCO3 is low (22-26 mEq normal) This is metabolic acidocis
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Help!! Having a hard time with wording this dx!
Imbalanced nutrition: less than body requirements r/t patient's low food intake AEB patient's BMI x%, weight 80 lbs . Body image is a psycho thing, and physiological (nutrition) should come first. Your second diagnosis could be "Disturbed body image r/t psychological disorder AEB pt. stating "I'm too fat" while his BMI is x%
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Am I over-thinking, or are these just bad test questions?
To answer your questions: *You shouldn't discuss this subject with your instructor. This won't change anything. All of the exams you will take in nursing school will consist of questions like this. *You should expect you exams to contain such questions, so the only productive thing you can do is to learn how to answer them. *So how do you answer them? I know the correct answers not because they make sense in the context of the question, but because I know what they're asking (and no, test-taking strategy, identifying the stem etc is not what i mean). These questions are written in such a way that they work retrograte from the correct answer. "Referred pain" is the correct answer, and from there the test writer needs to create a question and other choices, and he/she does depending on his/her level of creativity and intellect. Precision or clarity of expression is not important to them. You need to know what they want from you. You willl often see indiscrepancies about "teaching", but this is simply a way of writing a question. You need to know that the quality of sleep decreases with age, and they want to test your knowledge, so how can they frame it into a situational type of question? There could be options like what you got or like this: "A 75 y.o. patient discusses sleep with the nurse. Which statement, made by the patient, indicates understading of the effect of aging on sleep?" Or: "A new nurse is giving a presentation to a group of seniors. Which statement, made by the nurse, indicate correct understanding of an aging process?" The correct answer is the same. *Go through as many NCLEX style questions (from ATI, NCLEX reviewers, your study guides etc) as you can, the correct answers and rationales and memorize them. A lot of times, the rationales won't make sense, but you can't argue with them, just memorize. You will soon start to notice that they are concerned with a specific body of skills and knowledge that a nurse must possess. This body of knowledge is different from and more narrow than the content of your textbooks and lectures. If you are able to intuitively isolate it, you will be able to ace the exams, if not -- you just have to go through as many NCLEX style questions as you can and will start seeing the same content, so you will know how to answer them. *There is no other way around it, and it's pointless to argue, or get angry. I was in your shoes last year, trust me. They won't be changing or adjusting the questions, even if your logic is brilliant; you have to adjust to them to finish nursing school.
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What is it that makes the NCLEX so hard?
it's hard, because you can't figure out the right answer based on critical thinking. Your thinking over the questions is not going to lead you to the right answer, because your nursing school and texbooks haven't taught you what information to focus on when you study nursing. NCLEX is designed in such a way that you have to KNOW, not logically deduce, not guess what the right answer is. A lot of times the rationales don't make sense, so using your "rationality" also is not going to help you select the right answer. Another reason is -- if we assume that NCLEX uses similar guidelines as nursing schools for pass or fail, which is 77% on average -- this is a very high threshold. Think about it -- answering 75% of NCLEX correctly is actually a big number -- it shows that you know a lot, yet it's not eough to pass the exam, and you fail. The only way to study for NCLEX is to see as many NCLEX style questions, their correct answers and rationales as you can. You will soon notice that you get a lot of similar questions. They might be worded differently, but the correct answer is always the same. Don't bother with content review, don't bother with test taking strategies. Get as many NCLEX books from the library for free as you can, and only go through the questions and answers, and memorize them, memorize rationales for the correct answer. Have you done that? How did you study for the exams?